Hey
friends,
At later stages after product approvals, RA professionals are increasingly involved in tracking post-marketing activities and changes as part of life-cycle management of product. Products marketing, advertising, and communications are vetted by RA to ensure no such claims are made which is not aligned with commitments and information shared about the product during registration. They are also involved in aspects of commercial manufacturing, packaging and distribution, and business strategy, particularly as related to global submission strategies and policies. RA professional regularly participate in audits and inspections conducted by health authorities to check compliance of site.
However, please note that at an entry level you may not be involved in all the activities. A regulatory job during your initial days would be more of reading and understanding guidelines and interpreting it correctly so as to ensure compliance to market specific rules and regulations. Compilation and submission of product dossiers for registration purpose sometimes under the guidance of a manager who would be reviewing your dossiers before final submission, query responses on submitted dossiers, labelling and preparing content of package inserts, and maintenance of your dossiers by submitting change updates to health authorities.
As you gain more experience, skill sets and business sense, you will be moving towards more strategic roles, like getting involved in making regulatory policies and making global submission strategy for your firm, attending meetings with health authorities, due diligence, handling audits by FDA, EU and other global agencies, strategic evaluations of molecules during product selections, risk based analysis evaluating regulatory as well as business risk, representing your firm in regulatory forums etc
In my next blog I will share the top 10 mantras for becoming successful in this function. See you soon!!
Sharing a link about regulatory certification course
Regulatory Affairs Professionals Society (RAPS)
In today’s
blog I will share about roles and responsibilities of this function, but before
that let me just briefly touch upon the educational aspects.
If you
want to start your journey in pharmaceutical industry, specifically in this
function, the first step is to choose the right educational background which is
a Diploma in Pharmacy (D’Pharm), Bachelor of Pharmacy (B’Pharm) or Masters of
Pharmacy (M’Pharm). There are various courses designed for specialisation in regulatory
affairs after completing D’Pharm and/or B’Pharm. Globally, many reputed
educational institutions and universities are offering M’Pharm in regulatory
affairs. There are many certification courses as well. The distant learning
courses offered by many institutions can be easily done online to gain
knowledge.
Before
making any decision, you need to have some basic idea about roles and
responsibilities.
Pharmaceutical
industry is highly regulated industry and every drug before it is approved for
marketing goes through the scrutiny and clinical trials to ensure it safety,
efficacy and quality.
To achieve this objective a regulatory person should
be well versed with the laws, regulations & guidelines of the regulatory
agencies such as USFDA (United States Food and Drug Administration), European
Union of Drug Regulatory Affairs (EUDRA), or Drug controller General of India
(DCGI), etc. In any pharmaceutical firm the RA function is typically the source
of information on international regulatory issues, where RA professionals typically
monitor and analyse regulatory issues for multiple nations and regions of the
world.
During registration of products for granting product
approval or license to sell the drug in any market, RA professional is involved
in all aspects of the dossier preparation such as writing summaries, compiling,
publishing, and submitting dossier to regulatory agencies followed by handling
query and managing reports during review of dossier.
At later stages after product approvals, RA professionals are increasingly involved in tracking post-marketing activities and changes as part of life-cycle management of product. Products marketing, advertising, and communications are vetted by RA to ensure no such claims are made which is not aligned with commitments and information shared about the product during registration. They are also involved in aspects of commercial manufacturing, packaging and distribution, and business strategy, particularly as related to global submission strategies and policies. RA professional regularly participate in audits and inspections conducted by health authorities to check compliance of site.
However, please note that at an entry level you may not be involved in all the activities. A regulatory job during your initial days would be more of reading and understanding guidelines and interpreting it correctly so as to ensure compliance to market specific rules and regulations. Compilation and submission of product dossiers for registration purpose sometimes under the guidance of a manager who would be reviewing your dossiers before final submission, query responses on submitted dossiers, labelling and preparing content of package inserts, and maintenance of your dossiers by submitting change updates to health authorities.
As you gain more experience, skill sets and business sense, you will be moving towards more strategic roles, like getting involved in making regulatory policies and making global submission strategy for your firm, attending meetings with health authorities, due diligence, handling audits by FDA, EU and other global agencies, strategic evaluations of molecules during product selections, risk based analysis evaluating regulatory as well as business risk, representing your firm in regulatory forums etc
In my next blog I will share the top 10 mantras for becoming successful in this function. See you soon!!
Regulatory Affairs Professionals Society (RAPS)
Very informative blog, nicely explained step by step who want to make career in RA.
ReplyDeleteThanks a lot Sandeep.
DeleteThis is a great start up information for freshers. Appreciate the flow of information. Just a thought, need for RA in pharma even though we have documentation depts.such as QA. This could be covered in next blog.
ReplyDeleteThanks for your comment and suggestion. I will cover the need for RA even though we have QA dept in one of my future blogs.
DeleteGreat Nisha, Good initiative, knowing you & your knowledge & experience in this field. Very informative blog, nicely explained & motivate who wants the start up.
ReplyDeleteThanks a lot.
DeleteVery much to the point blog Nisha, in Hindi we call it "Gagar mai Sagar" i.e. entire sea in a pot, a good information on pharma regulatory for the aspirants willing to make carrier in RA.
ReplyDeleteQA ,QC, Marketing etc..are better discussed and known subjects compared to RA, your article provides good information.
Keep posting congratulations n all the best.
Suveer Shrivastava VP Quality.
Thank you very much Suveerji.
DeleteHi Nisha, you have chosen a good medium to share this useful information. The way you
ReplyDeleteshared this information is very nice. We are looking forward more information about this.
Thanks a lot
DeleteThank u Nisha.The information shared will definetly very helpful to my students n their parents....detail explanation would help them to understand n choose the correct path...Will b waiting for ur next blog.
ReplyDeleteThanks and I am very happy it will be helpful to you.
DeleteKudos Nisha for starting this blog. Your first post shares these nuggets of information so essential for all those wannabe RA professionals out there...looking forward to next post
ReplyDeleteThanks a lot.
DeleteNisha,Excellent and very informative blog. Keep it up.
ReplyDeleteThanks a lot Prasad.
DeleteThrough this blog Nisha has explained Regulatory functions, role and responsibilities very well. After globalusation Regulatory affairs turned in to Regulatory Technology which needs built in Skills, creativity and art of acieving the goal of the organization.
ReplyDeleteThanks a lot Dr. Satish. Agree with your point. I plan to cover this aspect in one of my future blogs.
DeleteVery informative and guiding for those who doesnt belong to pharma and want to enter into RA profession. Nicely written and easy to understand for the beginners. Looking forward for more such write up..
ReplyDeleteThanks a lot Ritesh.
ReplyDeleteThanks a lot Sheetal
ReplyDeleteGood going Nisha. Very helpful for those who could be confused regarding this field.Awaiting for your next blog. Worth the effort.
ReplyDeleteInformative content!! Looking forward to many more.. All the best.
ReplyDeleteGood crisp information about very less spoken profile of RA. This blog will surely help the beginners to take the right steps to get into RA.
ReplyDeleteNice article. Helpful
ReplyDelete